Methodology background

How compiled: Representative sample based on 700 goods and services (reviewed annually)

Sample size:
Approximately 180,000 price quotations per month

Geographic coverage: Sample - UK

Important points about consumer price inflation:

Consumer price inflation is the rate at which the prices of goods and services bought by households rise and fall; it is estimated using consumer price indices.

A price index can be used to measure inflation in a number of ways; the most common is to look at how the index has changed over a year, which is calculated by comparing the price index for the latest month with the same month a year ago.

To give an accurate picture of price changes, our consumer price indices are compiled using a large and representative sample of over 700 goods and services, and their price movements are regularly measured in approximately 20,000 outlets within the UK.

As of 21 March 2017, the Consumer Prices Index including owner occupiers’ housing costs (CPIH) is the first figure in our statistical releases; it is the most comprehensive measure of inflation as it includes owner occupiers’ housing costs and Council Tax, which are excluded from the CPI.

The CPI continues to be published; it is used in the government’s target for inflation and is produced to international standards in line with European regulations.

CPIH is not currently a National Statistic, it has been reassessed by the Office for Statistics Regulation (OSR) against the standards set out in the Code of Practice for Official Statistics; the assessment report published on 3 March 2016 included a number of requirements that need to be implemented for CPIH to regain its status as a National Statistic and we are working to address these.

The Retail Prices Index (RPI) and its derivatives have been assessed against the Code of Practice for Official Statistics and found not to meet the required standard for designation as National Statistics; the RPI, its sub-components and the RPIX continue to be published as they are tied to long-term contracts.

Overview of the output

Consumer price inflation is the rate at which the prices of the goods and services bought by households rise or fall, and is estimated by using consumer price indices. One way to understand a price index is to think of a very large shopping basket containing the goods and services typically bought by households. The price index estimates changes to the total cost of this basket. ‘Consumer Price Indices – A brief guide’ gives an overview of the methodology, and also explains the main features of the suite of indices and their uses.

As we spend more on some things than others, the components of the index are “weighted”, which ensures that they reflect the importance of the items in the average shopping basket, and the amounts we spend in different regions of the country and in different types of shops.

Consumer price indices are important indicators of how the UK economy is performing. The indices are used in many ways by the government, businesses, and society in general. They can affect interest rates, tax allowances, wages, state benefits, pensions, maintenance, contracts and many other payments. They also show the impact of inflation on family budgets and affect the value of the pound in your pocket. For more information see ‘Users and uses of consumer price inflation statistics (2016)’. Advisory Panels were established in 2015 to provide advice to the National Statistician on the uses and applications of prices indices, and on technical aspects of their measurement and construction.

As of 21 March 2017, the Consumer Prices Index including owner occupiers’ housing costs (CPIH) is the first figure in our statistical releases. Although otherwise identical to CPI, it is our most comprehensive measure as it includes costs associated with owning, maintaining and living in one’s own home (known as owner occupiers’ housing costs, or OOH), along with Council Tax. The CPIH compendium provides further information, including the rationale for the choice of methodology for measuring OOH, which is still extensively debated. We also publish quarterly articles that compare the different approaches to measuring OOH (data for alternative measures of OOH are also available with this article) and the different data sources for the OOH component. The CPI continues to be published as a National Statistic and is widely used; including in the government’s target for inflation. It is also the measure produced to comply with European regulations.

The National Statistics status of CPIH was suspended in 2014 due to concerns over the methods and processing of the private rents data used to estimate owner occupiers’ housing costs. These issues have been resolved and the improvements to quality assurance procedures for private rents data are detailed in an article. To regain National Statistics status we need to provide assurance that the index meets all the standards set out in the Code of Practice for Official Statistics. We have implemented an improvement programme to address this.

We are committed to improving the quality of consumer price statistics, and our work programme outlines planned developments. Please contact us by emailing cpi@ons.gsi.gov.uk if you have queries relating to these statistics.

Output quality

This document provides a range of information that describes the quality of the output and details any points that should be noted when using the output.

ONS has developed Guidelines for Measuring Statistical Quality; these are based upon the 5 European Statistical System (ESS) quality dimensions. This document addresses the quality dimensions and important quality characteristics, which are:

relevance

timeliness and punctuality

coherence and comparability

accuracy

output quality trade-offs

assessment of user needs and perceptions

accessibility and clarity

More information is provided about these quality dimensions in the sections below.

About the Output

Relevance

(The degree to which the statistical outputs meet users’ needs)

As of 21 March 2017, the Consumer Prices Index including owner occupiers’ housing costs (CPIH) is the first figure in our statistical releases. It is our most comprehensive measure of UK consumer price inflation, as it includes owner occupiers’ housing costs (OOH) and Council Tax. OOH costs are the costs of housing services associated with owning, maintaining and living in one’s own home and are an important component of household expenditure that are not included in the CPI. OOH does not include costs such as utility bills, minor repairs and maintenance, which are already included in the index.

CPIH uses an approach called rental equivalence to measure OOH. Rental equivalence uses the rent paid for an equivalent house as a proxy for the costs faced by an owner occupier. In other words, this answers the question “how much would I have to pay in rent to live in a home like mine?” for an owner occupier. OOH does not seek to capture increases in house prices. Although this may be inconsistent with some users’ expectations of measures of OOH, the inclusion of an asset price and therefore capital gains would make the index less suitable for a measure of consumption. OOH currently accounts for 16.5% of the expenditure weight of CPIH. This compares with a weight of 19.5% in 2005.

The Consumer Prices Index was first published in 1997 as the Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) - a consistent measure of inflation across Europe. The HICP was developed across the European Union (EU) for the purpose of assessing whether prospective members of the European Monetary Union would pass the inflation convergence criteria and of acting as a measure of inflation used by the European Central Bank in assessing price stability in the EU member countries.

In December 2003, the National Statistician decided the name of the UK version of the HICP would change to the CPI in all National Statistics publications. This decision was concurrent with the Chancellor of Exchequer’s Pre-Budget Report 2003 announcement that the UK inflation target would be based on the HICP, replacing the RPI excluding mortgage interest payments (RPIX).

The CPI continues to be published and is widely used. In particular, it is used by the government for inflation targeting, for uprating state pensions and benefits, and it is the measure reported to Eurostat to meet requirements of EU regulations.

The RPI was initially developed as a compensation index, derived from an index designed as an aid to protect ordinary workers from price increases associated with the First World War. The RPI provides estimates of inflation from 1947 onwards with the first official release of consumer price inflation being produced in January 1956. Until the introduction of the UK CPI (also known at the time Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices, HICP) in 1996, the RPI and its derivatives, were the only measures of UK consumer price inflation available to users.

Following a consultation on options for improving the Retail Prices Index (RPI) , the National Statistician, Jil Matheson, concluded that one of the formulae used to produce the RPI does not meet international standards and recommended that a new index be published. The Retail Prices Index (RPI) and its derivatives have been assessed against the Code of Practice for Official Statistics and found not to meet the required standard for designation as National Statistics. As of 21 March 2017, the publication of RPI-related data was scaled back, limited to the information required for critical needs of existing users to be met. Further detail can be found in Clarification of publication arrangements for the RPI and related indices.

The CPIH, CPI and RPI all measure the average change from month to month in the prices of consumer goods and services purchased in the UK, although there are differences in coverage and methodology. The most significant differences in coverage relate to the treatment of housing costs, particularly owner-occupier costs, which are included in CPIH and RPI but excluded from the CPI. There are also differences in the population covered, RPI covers only private households but excludes the top 4% of households by income and pensioner households who receive at least three-quarters of their income from benefits. The CPIH and CPI, by contrast, cover the expenditure of all private households, institutional households and visitors to the UK.

Timeliness and punctuality

(Timeliness refers to the lapse of time between publication and the period to which the data refer. Punctuality refers to the gap between planned and actual publication dates.)

The CPIH, CPI and RPI are produced monthly. Data refer to prices at a set point in time, which is usually the second or third Tuesday of each month. Two exceptions in the CPIH and CPI are the collection of petrol and diesel prices and the collection of premiums for car and house contents insurance, which both reflect average prices over the month. Publication takes place four or five weeks later and has never been delayed or missed.

Publication dates are pre-announced on the ONS website.

In August 2016, provisional publication dates for 2018 were announced alongside the 2017 dates. The practice of advance notice of a minimum of 18 months to a maximum of 30 months will be maintained in future years. In the unlikely event of a change to the pre-announced release schedule, public attention will be drawn to the change and reasons for the change explained fully at the same time, as set out in the Code of Practice for Official Statistics.

How the output is created

The CPIH, CPI and RPI are annually chain-linked indices: each year a series of index numbers is calculated which takes the value 100 in the most recent January, and each year’s indices are then linked together to produce a continuous index series covering several years.

This procedure makes it relatively easy to change the items, outlets and locations each year to ensure the indices are kept up to date, although they must be held constant as far as possible within the year.

In order to produce these indices, prices need to be collected by following the procedures listed below:

Selection of items

Within each year, the CPIH, CPI and RPI are fixed quantity price indices: they measure the change in the price of a basket of fixed composition, quantity and as far as is possible quality. Specific items are chosen to represent price movements in the baskets; prices are collected for those items only. There are approximately 700 representative items. When selecting these items there are some individual goods and services where expenditure is sufficiently large that they merit inclusion in their own right; these include personal computers, petrol and electricity supply. However more commonly, it is necessary to select a sample of specific goods and services that give a reliable measure of price movements for a broad range of similar items. The selection of these representative items is purposive or judgmental. The number of items chosen to represent price changes within each expenditure category depends both on the weight of the category and the variability of price changes between the various items that could be chosen to represent the category.

Representative items are chosen to be representative of general expenditure across the whole of the UK; they are not necessarily representative for a particular individual or group of the population. In order that the indices remain representative of consumer spending patterns over time, the selection of items is reviewed each year. New items may be introduced for a variety of reasons. These include the development of new products, particularly in high technology sectors such as audio-visual equipment; the need to improve coverage in areas where consumers spend a significant or growing proportion of their income, where price changes are very variable, or the replacement of existing items for very similar products that have become more popular. Additions to the basket of representative items each year are broadly matched by the number of items removed so that production costs and lags can be contained.

Price collection

There are 3 distinct collection methods used in reaching the total of over 180,000 prices collected. Each requires the selection in the base period (January) of a product conforming to the item description and the subsequent tracking of the price of this product on a month by month basis. If the product ceases to be available, a replacement product is chosen and quality adjustment may be required. The 3 methods are:

local collection - local price collectors visit 20,000 shops in around 150 locations to collect over 100,000 prices. This ensures that variations in price across the UK are captured. The price collectors visit the same shops each month to collect the prices of identical products to ensure they are collecting like for like. The shelf-price of an item is collected, and entered into a hand-held computer

central shops - for some larger chain stores, there is a central pricing policy which is used throughout their UK branches. These prices are collected centrally, and weighted according to the retailer’s market share. The results are then combined with those from the local price collection

central collection - prices are collected centrally for goods and services where the price is the same for all UK residents or the regional variation can be collected centrally (for example via the internet, telephone or e-mail enquiries). Index calculations are carried out separately from the main method of index production. This is the case for around 130 items

Selection of locations and outlets

Prices are collected in around 150 locations across the 12 government regions within the UK. Location selection takes place separately within each region, with the probability of a particular location being selected proportional to the number of employees in the retail sector in that location.

Within a location, outlets are selected randomly. To do this, the outlets in a location are first enumerated to produce a sampling frame. This enumeration is carried out by price collectors visiting the postcodes in each location and noting details of all retail outlets found, including an estimate of the net retail floor space, which is used as a proxy for turnover. For department stores and other shops selling a wide variety of goods, the floor space devoted to each commodity group is measured. Outlets are selected with the probability of selection being proportional to floor space or, for some categories of shops (for example independent green grocers), by simple random sampling. Approximately one fifth of locations are either changed or re-enumerated each year.

Selection of products

For most goods, the selection of products and varieties within outlets is purposive. In each outlet, collectors choose one product “representative of what people buy in the area” from all products matching the specification of each item to be priced in that outlet. To facilitate this, they ask the retailer what are the most popular brands and those that are stocked regularly. The chosen products are reviewed each January to ensure that what is being priced still reflects these criteria.

Local probability sampling is used for some household appliances and durable goods (for example washing machines, fridge freezers and digital camcorders). Under this approach, individual models are defined in terms of their main price determining attributes (for example, for washing machines these include capacity, brand and energy consumption). Regression modelling is then used to put these products into homogeneous attribute groups to create a representative sampling frame. Using probability proportional to size sampling, a list of 6 prioritised attribute groupings are then selected for each price collector. Each collector is asked to find an item matching the first attribute group on the list in their outlet; if this is not possible they move on to the second etc. They have 6 choices and if the sixth is not found they revert to the current method of looking for the best sold product in the outlet.

Weights

The CPIH, CPI and RPI are produced in stages, with indices obtained at each stage weighted together to give higher level indices. At the lowest level (the elementary aggregate or stratum index level), weighting data are not available and stratum indices are calculated using predominantly the geometric mean for the CPIH and CPI, and arithmetic means for the RPI. Indices for the strata are arithmetically weighted together according to expenditure shares to produce the CPIH, CPI and RPI item indices. Item indices are then arithmetically weighted into broader categories for publication.

The data used to produce the weights come from a variety of sources. The published CPIH and CPI weights are derived from the National Accounts’ estimates of household final monetary consumption expenditure in the UK and include the expenditure of all private households, residents of institutional households, and foreign visitors to the UK. The lower level weights use estimates of household expenditure derived from a variety of sources, including the most recent Living Costs and Food Survey (LCF), and Annual Business Survey. On 21 March 2017, we introduced an additional level of detail within the classification structure for which weights and indices are produced. The structure is called the European classification of individual consumption according to purpose (ECOICOP).

Stratum weights, item weights and the published RPI weights are mainly obtained from the LCF. The LCF is a continuous survey of the expenditure patterns of private households based on a sample of around 6,000 households per annum. Response rates and sampling errors are given in sections B1 and B3 of the Family Spending report.

When using LCF data for RPI purposes, the following households are excluded: the top 4% of households by income and pensioner households dependent on state benefits for at least 75% of their income.

Rates of change

Rates of change for the CPIH and CPI are calculated from unrounded index levels rather than on the published indices, which are rounded to 1 decimal place. The use of unrounded indices increases the accuracy of the calculation. Rates of change for the RPI are calculated from the rounded published indices.

More detail on the methods and terminology used are covered above in the Consumer Price Indices Technical Manual.

Validation and quality assurance

Accuracy

(The degree of closeness between an estimate and the true value)

The methodology for estimating the accuracy of the CPIH, CPI and RPI has not yet been fully developed because of the complexity of the sample design. Work is underway to aid users in understanding the accuracy of these statistics and work in the field of estimating the accuracy of indices is continuing.

Data is collected from 2 distinct sources, survey data and administrative data. Survey data has been collected for a statistical purpose using assured methodology, and its quality is known. Administrative data has been collected for non-statistical purposes by Government departments and the Private Sector. To ensure the quality of this data in the production of Official Statistics, the UK Statistical Authority has published a regulatory standard for the Quality Assurance of Administrative Data. The article Quality assurance of administrative data presents this information for CPIH and CPI.

Coherence and comparability

(Coherence is the degree to which data that is derived from different sources or methods, but refers to the same topic, are similar. Comparability is the degree to which data can be compared over time and domain for example, geographic level).

Coherence

The CPIH, CPI and RPI all measure the average change from month to month in the prices of consumer goods and services purchased in the UK. However, they differ in both coverage and methodology. A detailed description of these differences is given in the article entitled Users and uses of the consumer price inflation statistics.

The differences are summarised below:

for approximately 60% of the CPIH and CPI, the geometric mean is used to combine the individual prices at the first stage of aggregation; with a combination of arithmetic mean (ratio of average prices), weighted and other formulae used for the remainder. The RPI uses a combination of arithmetic means (average of price relatives and ratio of average prices), weighted and other formulae.

the CPI excludes a number of RPI series mainly relating to housing costs (for example, council tax), and in particular to owner occupiers’ housing costs (including mortgage interest payments, house depreciation and buildings insurance)

the CPIH and CPI include series for university accommodation fees, foreign students’ university tuition fees, and unit trust and stockbrokers’ charges, none of which are included in the RPI

the CPIH includes the same series as the CPI, but includes a measure of owner occupiers’ housing costs measured using an internationally recognised approach known as rental equivalence, along with council tax.

Download this table

The CPIH and CPI weights are based on expenditure by all private households, foreign visitors to the UK and residents of institutional households. In the RPI, weights are based on expenditure by private households only, excluding the highest income households and pensioner households mainly dependent on state benefits

In the construction of the CPIH and CPI weights, amounts paid out in insurance claims are distributed among the COICOP headings according to the nature of the claims’ expenditure, with the residual (the service charge) being allocated to the relevant insurance heading. For the RPI weights, total expenditure (that is, gross of claims paid out) is assigned to the relevant insurance heading

A breakdown of the difference between the CPIH and RPI, and the CPI and RPI, annual rates of inflation is shown in Table 5 of the Consumer Price Inflation Dataset.

Comparability

CPIH

The official CPIH series (based on 2015=100) started in 2013 and is published in the Consumer Price Inflation Statistical Bulletin. The data are also available electronically on the ONS website. Quarterly analyses of the different approaches to measuring OOH and different data sources for the OOH component are available. Aside from the inclusion of OOH and Council Tax, the CPIH basket of goods is identical to that for CPI.

CPIH was re-referenced to 2015 equals 100 on publication of the January 2016 figures.

CPI

The official CPI series started in 1996. The methodology and index construction are consistent through time, although the coverage of the CPI has been extended in stages since its official launch. With effect from the January 2000 index, the coverage of goods and services was extended to include the following services which had been previously excluded: out-patient services (Group 06.2); some education services, such as university tuition fees (part of Division 10); childcare services (part of Group 12.4); and insurance services (Group 12.6). At the same time, the population basis for the weights was broadened from private households to also include expenditure by foreign visitors and residents of institutional households.

Further extensions to coverage took place with effect from the January 2001 index, with the inclusion of hospital services and nursing homes (Group 06.3) and retirement homes (part of Group 12.4). From January 2002, coverage of the CPI was extended again to include service charges expressed as a proportion of the transaction value, for example unit trust and stockbrokers’ charges, and foreign currency exchange commission (part of Group 12.6).

These extensions to coverage only came into effect from the point of their introduction; indices for earlier periods were not revised to make their coverage consistent with later periods. More details about these extensions to coverage can be found in a series of CPI Methodological Articles on the ONS website.

Estimates of the CPI are available for 1988 to 1995. These estimates are broadly consistent with data from 1996 but should be treated with some caution: in particular, the weights were derived from the RPI and are therefore based on a different population to later data. In addition, indices for air fares and Personal Computers (PCs), which should have been included according to the rules used for constructing the CPI, are not available over this time period and are therefore excluded. Improvements to the way seasonal items of new car prices and private rents were introduced in 2010, 2011 and 2012 respectively. A modelled back series for CPI covering 1950 to 2013 has been published.

CPI was re-referenced to 2015 equals 100 on publication of the January 2016 figures.

RPI

RPI data are available back to 1947 but have been re-referenced on several occasions since then: in 1952, 1956, 1962, 1974 and 1987. Referencing has generally been accompanied by changes to the coverage and/or structure of the detailed sub-components. Details of these changes are given in Appendices 1 and 2 of the above Consumer Price Indices Technical Manual.

Most recently, housing depreciation was included in the RPI in 1995, as an element of owner-occupier’ housing costs. UK holidays were introduced in 1994 and foreign holidays in 1993. Improvements to the way that mortgage interest payments, seasonal items, new car prices and private rents were measured were introduced in 2010, 2011 and 2012 respectively. In January 2013, following a consultation on the RPI, the National Statistician announced that, in future, changes to the RPI would be limited to routine changes such as the update of the basket of goods and services.

Changes in the quality of products being priced

One of the more difficult issues in producing the inflation measures is the accurate measurement and treatment of quality change due to changing product specifications. As a measure of price change alone, the indices should reflect the cost of buying a fixed basket of goods and services of constant quality. However, products often disappear or are replaced with new versions of a different quality or specification, and brand new products also become available. When such a situation arises, one of the following methods is adopted:

direct comparison

direct quality adjustment

imputation

In all cases, a nominal price in the base month (January) is needed for the new or replacement product.

Direct comparison

If there is another product which is directly comparable, for example a garment identical except that it is a different colour, then the new one directly replaces the old one and its base price remains the same.

Direct quality adjustment

This is the preferred method of dealing with the situation where a replacement product is of a different quality or specification. An attempt is made to place a value on the quality (or specification) difference and the base price is adjusted accordingly. There are 3 methods used in the UK:

option costing: this can be used when a product changes in specification and it is possible to value separately the components that have changed. This method is used for the quality adjustment of new cars in the CPIH and CPI.

quantity adjustment: this is used when there is a permanent size change in homogenous goods such as food and drink. An adjustment is made to the base price pro rata to the change in the weight or quantity

hedonic regression: this technique uses a set of ordinary least square regressions to relate the price of an item to its measurable characteristics. It is used for the quality adjustment of PCs, laptop computers, tablet computers, digital cameras, pre-pay mobile phone handsets and smartphones.

Imputation

If the replacement product is of a different quality or specification, and no information is available to quantify the difference, a base price is calculated for the new product by assuming that its price change from the base month up until that month equals the average change in the elementary aggregate for that item.

Further details about quality adjustment are given in sections 8.2 and 8.4 of the Consumer Price Indices Technical Manual.

Concepts and definitions

(Concepts and definitions describe the legislation governing the output, and a description of the classifications used in the output.)

CPIH is defined as the Consumer Prices Index including owner occupiers’ housing costs. This reflects the fact that it is identical to the CPI, with the exception of inclusion of owner occupiers’ housing costs and Council Tax.

Internationally, the CPI is known as the HICP. The HICP is defined in a series of legally binding European Union regulations. The Council Regulation (EC) No 2494/95 of 23 October 1995 concerning ”harmonised indices of consumer prices” provides the legal basis of the HICPs and a series of subsequent Council and Commission regulations define its construction and coverage.

The aim of these regulations is to establish a set of minimum standards that ensure that the HICPs constructed in Member States are comparable. They aim to promote good statistical practice by defining a series of minimum standards while recognising the principle of ”subsidiarity” to allow for national circumstances.

Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices regulations are drafted by the European Commission (Eurostat) in conjunction with Member States through the Price Statistics Working Group. This work is overseen and approved by the European Statistical System Committee made up of Heads of EU National Statistical Institutes and the Head of Eurostat. Like other Member States, the UK can influence legislation but cannot dictate it. As the HICP is the measure of inflation used by the European Central Bank (ECB) for monitoring inflation in the Euro area, the ”opinion” of the ECB is also sought on all regulations.

The HICP regulations are obligatory in every EU Member State. Eurostat, on behalf of the commission, undertakes an ongoing compliance monitoring programme to evaluate compliance with the HICP regulations.

The RPI as it exists today is very different from the first official consumer price index produced in 1914. That index was produced with unchanged weights until 1936 when the then Ministry of Labour announced its intention to update the RPI weights using the results of a large scale household survey. This new process was put on hold due to the onset of the Second World War. In 1946, a Cost of Living Advisory Committee was set up to oversee the production of an Interim Index of Retail Prices but it was not until 1956 that the first official Retail Price Index was introduced.

In 1989, responsibility for the production of the RPI moved from the Employment Dept to the newly re-organised Central Statistics Office (later to be renamed the Office for National Statistics). Details of the legislation passed in order to reach this position are included in Appendix 1 of the Consumer Price Indices Technical Manual.

Section 21 of The Statistics and Registration Service Act which came into force on 1 April 2008 stated that the Statistics Authority must ”compile and maintain the Retail Price Index and publish it every month”. The scope and definition of the index was and remains, though, the responsibility of the Chancellor of the Exchequer.

Other information

Assessment of user needs and perceptions

(The processes for finding out about users and uses, and their views on the statistical products).

The indices are used in many ways by the government, businesses, and society in general. They can affect interest rates, tax allowances, wages, state benefits, pensions, maintenance, contracts and many other payments. They also show the impact of inflation on family budgets and affect the value of the pound in your pocket. For more information see Users and uses of consumer price inflation statistics (2016). There are also many mechanisms whereby users are able to provide views on these statistics:

Sources for further information or advice

Accessibility and clarity

(Accessibility is the ease with which users are able to access the data, also reflecting the format in which the data are available and the availability of supporting information. Clarity refers to the quality and sufficiency of the release details, illustrations and accompanying advice).

ONS's recommended format for accessible content is a combination of HTML web pages for narrative, charts and graphs, with data being provided in usable formats such as CSV and XLS. The ONS website also offers users the option to download the narrative in PDF format. In some instances other software may be used, or may be available on request. For further information please refer to the contact details at the beginning of this document.

Advance access to the data: ONS policy allows a list of agreed officials to have access to the data at 9:30am, one day before publication, on a need to know basis. A full breakdown of these officials can be found on the ONS website.

Time series data - download free from the ONS website.

General enquiries on the indices, compilation methods, quality information or difficulties in finding the latest figures can be e-mailed to the publication team at cpi@ons.gov.uk.

For information regarding conditions of access to data, please refer to the links below:

In addition to this Quality and Methodology Information, quality information and advanced notice of any forthcoming major changes in methodology relevant to each release are available in the Consumer Price Inflation Statistical Bulletin.